Leisure and Luxury in the Age of Nero: The Villas of Oplontis near Pompeii

February 19 - May 15, 2016 - This international traveling exhibition explores the lavish lifestyle and economic interests of ancient Rome’s wealthiest and most powerful citizens, who vacationed along the Bay of Naples. Julius Caesar, Cicero, Augustus, and Nero all owned villas here. With more than 200 objects on loan from Italy, the exhibition focuses on two structures at Oplontis that were buried when Mount Vesuvius erupted in AD 79. One is an enormous luxury villa that may once have belonged to the family of Nero’s second wife Poppaea. The other is a nearby commercial-residential complex—a center for the trade in wine and other produce of villa lands. Together these two establishments speak eloquently of the ways in which the Roman elite built, maintained, and displayed their vast wealth, political power, and social prestige. In presenting a selection of impressive works of art along with ordinary utilitarian objects, the exhibition also calls attention to Roman disparities of wealth, social class, and consumption. Such disparities were as problematic for Roman society as they are for ours today.

Dates:February 19, 2016 09:00 am to May 15, 2016 04:00 pm
Address:434 South State Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1390, United States
Phone:734.764.9304
Contact:Kelsey Museum of Archaeology
Website:http://lsa.umich.edu/kelsey/exhibitions/special-exhibitions.html